tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4405434899962176135.post6268802274249932864..comments2019-08-31T06:01:25.692-04:00Comments on Practical Agility: A Survival Guide for New Agile Coaches - Are We There Yet?Dave Rooneyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00934266695771206046noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4405434899962176135.post-66211681756278612112011-07-01T08:12:44.012-04:002011-07-01T08:12:44.012-04:00Nice post. I was stuck on a plane on the tarmac re...Nice post. I was stuck on a plane on the tarmac recently for over 2 hours while a kid in the row behind me kept asking &quot;are we there yet?&quot;. If you think it&#39;s bad when you&#39;re driving - consider it when you haven&#39;t even left yet !<br /><br />I guess the challenge in a longer term agile project is the fuzziness of epics that are further out make it difficult to see the top of Adrianhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07244602226567642944noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4405434899962176135.post-57011286979033333882011-07-01T04:13:05.655-04:002011-07-01T04:13:05.655-04:00Good post. I think &quot;sustainable pace&quot; de...Good post. I think <b>&quot;sustainable pace&quot;</b> describes what you are saying well. We need the agile teams running at a sustainable pace and not sprinting all the time. But it is ok to sprint sometimes, but not for too long. In the team that I work with we usually sprint on our own initiative, there is no one that demands it of us.<br /><br />Something that we don&#39;t do, but maybe we Klaus Even Enevoldsenhttp://www.even.dknoreply@blogger.com